I’ve spoken about the thinking-doing gap, which elaborates how our actions don’t always coincide with our desires. This is kinda funny, no? We can want to do something with ourselves, yet we fail. Totally funny. We are fully autonomous beings yet we cannot even do what we want. Still not seeing the humour? Somehow we defeat ourselves in a struggle for control, where something outguns our conscious desires. Ok, well at least agree it’s ironic. The reason for this is…..that we are not defeating ourself. We are actually winning for ourselves, but the opponent is not the conscious mind, it’s the subconscious mind, or it’s pal, the ego.
So to be clear, we will always do what we want, the gap is that we are not fully attuned to what our inner entities are seeking. When we want to lose weight but eat chocolate cake, it’s because the conscious mind’s desire to lose weight is outmatched by the subconscious mind’s desire to retain the weight. Sounds ludicrous, however, the subconscious is often a more potent actor in our inner cast of characters, and by holding on to excess weight it rescues you from attention, foregos risky opportunities, and helps to maintain your subconscious impression of yourself, which apparently carries excess weight.
Huh! So why do we procrastinate in assignments or go out partying when we should be studying? Why do we turn on Netflix when we know we shouldn’t? Same thing. We have an internal self image of who we are physically, mentally, economically, psychologically, and in all other dimensions. Studies show that distress builds more as we approach moments of growth than we have in moments of challenge. It seems that we will fight to maintain status quo, but when it’s time to graduate, get promoted, or otherwise ‘move up’ in life, our internal judgment wants to sabotage. Your subconscious is smart enough to know that maintenance of your internal self image is achieved one sabotage at a time. One assignment delayed. One exam half prepped. One “deserved treat” when dieting. And it’ll make you say “no” a zillion times using tricks it knows will work on you.
The subconscious is where all of our trauma and adaptations are stored. It retains its own worldviews and logic on things, which is often massively incorrect and totally detrimental to living a big and joyous life. It retains stereotypes, prejudices, and “truths”, all of which serve to protect you from your perceived harms and are really damn tenacious and hard to extinguish. We’ve all got these ugly beliefs and behaviours, and from an energetic standpoint, are really the embodiment and manifestation of the things you judged and experienced as negative, but didn’t release into the world but rather harboured yourself with your own protective cordon.
I called the subconscious more potent but not more powerful intentionally because the conscious mind can do anything it wants, and it really needs to be the captain of your ship. If you have surgery scheduled for tomorrow and you’re prohibited from eating or drinking anything for 24 hours, will you eat or drink anything? Absolutely not. Because your conscious mind can and will ignore the incessant nagging of your hunger and thirst because it senses from you when it’s time to take charge. In this example, surgery is a ‘big deal’ and so your conscious mind ensures that you are ready for that procedure. Funny enough we don’t need something so profound, just something meaningful to us. I’m sure we’ve all woken stupid early for some flight to the Caribbean because that’s super fun and important to us. So the bottom line, when something is important enough to our conscious mind, it can and will order our other internal entities to obey.
So how do we elevate importance? Good question. This is something that if it isn’t inherent, you won’t beat your subconscious in a debate. This is why diets can work temporarily but then revert back. Instead of trying to argue, there are two approaches:
- Take on that internal self image. Choose to be thinner, more educated, better dressed, super successful, whatever you want. Use the power of intentionality in meditation to bring things to you. Your brain cannot distinguish between dreams and reality, and so visualizing these experiences in your mind in rich detail makes your subconscious think it’s already happened, in which case it needs to accept it (which it may, after a very nasty fight). You can also use other complementary tools, like creating a slideshow of your life with your awesome boat, killer abs, emceeing excellence. Again, whatever you want. Make it as real as possible in your mind, and even feel the emotions as you cycle through your imagery. Perception is reality so teach that little jerk what your life now is and it’ll reluctantly come along.
- The second technique will always be needed, and I call this the “no dictatorship”. When a thought comes into your mind to do something that even hints at preventing achievement of your objective, you respond back swiftly in your mind with, “Not a fucking chance, no!” You don’t listen to the voice, you don’t argue with it, you don’t let it run its arguments, you immediately and decisively say, “Not a fucking chance, no!” When the inner voice tries more, you reply back louder and more clearly each time. If you can do this you are guaranteed to achieve your objectives, even in the absence of 1. above.
You’ve now got all you need to achieve any objective you want. All that’s needed is for you to disallow any undesirable thoughts and actions. Piece of cake. Another tip…if you want to minimize the number of times you must exhibit ‘no dictatorship’, whatever the temptation, remove it. If you’re dieting and have delicious salt & vinegar chips sitting in the pantry, don’t make yourself say no a million times. Get rid of the chips (I’ll take them) and then it’s no longer an option. If it’s Netflix, have someone hide your remote or take away your TV. One “no” is far, far easier than infinite “no”s.
But wait, what about things I want to do and prevent myself from doing? Of course we need to address how the ‘no dictatorship’ works for that too. Let’s say you set your alarm for 5:30am so you can go to the gym. You wake up to your shit annoying alarm and want to hurl it across the room. It’s pitch black and you’re bagged and you haven’t taken a sunny vacation in years. It’s freezing and awful outside and the last thing you want to do is haul your tired body to the gym. BUT, this is the will of your conscious, and your conscious will overcome everything if knows it’s important.
The ‘no dictatorship’ says no resoundingly to all the voices that persuade you to stay in bed, stay warm, drink coffee leisurely. It rages back with ferocity to refuse any stupid saying, like “I’d rather enjoy my life and die younger than do this”, because we know that’s not true. Your conscious mind chose this activity to achieve the outcome you want in life, and nothing will stand in the way. You entertain precisely zero of these voices, and rather state, “Not a fucking chance, no!”
Before signing off I want to add another nugget of strength to your ‘no dictatorship.’ Our internal voices want us to do all sorts of things that are improper and incorrect and lead to suboptimal outcomes. It wants you to believe in your superiority and the inferiority of others. It wants you to believe that momentary indiscretions and some ethical blips are okay. It wants to slip in “treats” of drugs and porn and candy. It wants you to be beholden to the embodiment of your fears and greed, and lay waste to anything that stands in your way. As you confidently state, “Not a fucking chance, no!” to some of the uglier thoughts you can also say, “That is definitely not the person I am.” Discriminate against your voices that discriminate and segregate, so that in you are always the person you want to be.